Not in a category
Google Street View @ MTC Exterior
We haven’t opened our HQ to the public – sadly there’s just too much top secret R&D going on to allow that! However, thanks to Google and their Street View cameras, you’ll gain unparalleled access to the home of McLaren-Honda.
Follow the footsteps of Fernando Alonso and Jenson Button through the gates of McLaren. Take a trip down the VIP road, stopping by the 50,000 sq. m lake and get to the iconic, Sir Norman Foster designed McLaren Technology Centre.
Once you reach the front doors, take a tour of the MTC from anywhere in the world. You’ll be able to see the facility where we produce our F1 cars, and where McLaren Applied Technologies apply F1 innovations to other industries.
The MTC itself is an award-winning icon of design, environmental efficiency and high technology. Scroll down to take the tour.
Continue the journey by stepping inside the MTC with Google Street View
Lewis Hamilton 2015 Australian Grand Prix Race Preview
Nico rides the Rosberg Express
Bose to become ‘Official Team Partner in Sound’
2015 Australian Grand Prix Preview
Melbourne snapshot
Jenson Button
“Melbourne means the same thing every year: racing! After a long winter of preparation, it’s always good to see the lights go out and get the season underway. It’ll be fascinating to see how we stack up against the opposition.”
Kevin Magnussen
“Although the circumstances are not ideal, I’m thrilled to be racing in Australia. It’s a race that I have fond memories of from last year and I’m excited to see what the MP4-30 can do around Albert Park. The car felt a step forward from last year when I drove it in testing.”
Circuit lowdown
Albert Park, situated in the southern suburbs of Melbourne, hosts its 20th Australian Grand Prix in 2015. The track runs in a clockwise direction around a lake and it has a relatively slow average speed, being made up of predominantly second and third-gear corners.
This being the only race weekend of the year at the circuit, the asphalt is very slippery to begin with. Conditions improve as Pirelli’s soft and medium-compound tyres leave their mark and grip levels usually become consistent by the end of Friday practice.
There’s one change to the schedule from previous years: the 58-lap race will start at 16:00 (05:00GMT), which is one hour earlier than last season.
Albert Park facts & stats
Australian Grand Prix
Start time | 16:00 (local)/05:00 (GMT) |
Race distance | 58 laps (full world championship points awarded at 75% distance/43.5 laps) |
2014 winner | Nico Rosberg |
2014 pole position | Lewis Hamilton 1m44.231s, 183.159km/h (wet) |
2014 fastest lap | Nico Rosberg, lap 19, 1m32.478s, 206.436km/h |
Chances of a Safety Car | High. Six of the last seven races have been interrupted by the Safety Car, and the 2009 Australian Grand Prix (won by Jenson Button) even finished behind it. |
When not to put the kettle on | Laps 10 to 12 and 35 to 40. Last year’s race was won using a two-stop strategy, with most front-runners pitting during these laps |
Weather forecast | Unpredictable. It’s autumn in Melbourne, so you regularly get four seasons in one day. Ambient temperatures are usually around 20 degrees at this time of year. |
Albert Park
First race | 1996 (first Australian GP: 1985) |
Circuit length | 5.303km/3.295 miles |
Run to Turn One | 350 metres |
Longest straight | 860 metres, on the approach to Turn One |
Top speed | 305km/h, on the start-finish straight |
DRS zones | Two – the first on the approach to Turn One, the second on the approach to Turn Three |
Key corner | The Esses at Turns 11 and 12. Minimum speed 225km/h and the track drops away at the exit, so it’s easy to run wide |
Pitlane length | 280 metres, estimated time loss 21 seconds |
Significant circuit changes for 2015 | None |
Car performance
Fuel consumption | 1.7kg per lap. This is the second highest fuel consumption figure of the season, due to the short bursts of acceleration from low speeds |
Full throttle | 61 per cent of the lap; the longest flat-out section is 843 metres |
Brake wear | High. There are seven big stops from speeds of more than 230km/h |
Gear changes | 56 per lap / 3248 per race |
Lap time improvement in 2014 | 2.465 seconds FP1 best – 1m31.840s FP2 best – 1m29.625s FP3 best – 1m29.375s. It rained during qualifying last year, so lap times were slower |
Did you know? | Albert Park hosted the non-championship Australian Grand Prix between 1953 and ’58. Unlike today, the circuit ran in an anti-clockwise direction. |
Technical words of wisdom
Jonathan Neale, Chief Operating Officer and acting CEO
“Historically, the biggest technical challenge that the teams face in Melbourne is ride quality. We’ve been testing in cold conditions, on cold tyres, in Europe and we immediately face ride quality problems when we get to Albert Park. Effectively, it’s the car bumping. The pitch oscillation on the car and the particular nature of the straight in Melbourne provides a real challenge: aerodynamicists want to run the car stiff and engineers want to run it as soft as possible. Somewhere in the middle of all that lies a ride quality issue.”
McLaren at the Australian Grand Prix
Wins | 11 (Adelaide: 1986, 1988, 1991, 1992, 1993. Melbourne: 1997, 1998, 2003, 2008, 2010, 2012) |
Poles | 10 (Adelaide: 1988, 1989, 1990, 1991, 199. Melbourne: 1998, 1999, 2000, 2008, 2012) |
Fastest laps | 8 (Adelaide: 1988, 1991. Melbourne: 1998, 2002, 2003, 2006, 2008, 2012) |
Memorable Australian Grand Prix: 1986
Arguably the most exciting race of the ’80s. Three drivers entered the season-finale with a shot at the title: Nigel Mansell (70 points), Alain Prost (64) and Nelson Piquet (63). The Williams drivers locked out the front row of the grid, with Prost (McLaren) lining up fourth.
Mansell’s title chances blew up when his right-rear tyre exploded at 180mph, leaving Williams with no option other than to pit Piquet for precautionary fresh rubber. Prost took the lead and won the race by four seconds, giving him his second world title.
#22 Jenson Button
Age | 35 (January 19 1980) |
GPs | 266 |
Wins | 15 |
Poles | 8 |
Fastest laps | 8 |
Best result in Australia: | 1st (2009, 2010, 2012) |
“I’m so excited to be back in Melbourne. After the ups and downs of 2014, I feel that the challenge of 2015 is a completely new chapter in my career and I’m totally up for it. I also love Melbourne – it’s a fantastic city with great people and the atmosphere is always buzzing – Albert Park is the perfect place for the season-opener.
“While we know the city and the circuit well, what is more of an unknown is how we will fare in the MP4-30. McLaren-Honda has been working incredibly hard over the winter, and although we would of course have liked to cover more miles in Jerez and Barcelona, I can definitely see a difference in the car from the first day to the last. The team’s commitment to development and improvement, both in Woking and in Japan, is astonishing, and despite some tricky days in testing, we are seeing definitive progress. The car is a solid base which gives me optimism that we will get there, we just need patience.
“Melbourne is always a fascinating spectacle: nobody quite knows where they’ll be in comparison to their rivals, and even though the other teams are now in the second year of the turbo era, all of the development from last year has been done very much behind the scenes, so I don’t think anyone has quite shown their full hand yet. The race at Albert Park will be a huge learning curve for us, but I’ll be working flat-out with my engineers to get the car set up as best we can, and together, we’ll fight right until the last moment to get the most out of the weekend.
“Fernando not being able to race is a real shame and I hope he makes a speedy recovery so that he can get behind the wheel again very soon. It’s great to see Kevin back in the car though and I’ll know he’ll do a great job in Fernando’s absence, so I wish him well this weekend.”
#20 Kevin Magnussen
Age | 22 (October 05 1992) |
GPs | 19 |
Wins | 0 |
Poles | 0 |
Fastest Laps | 0 |
Best result in Australia: | 2nd (2014) |
“I’m really pleased to be behind the wheel with McLaren-Honda at Melbourne again. Of course, the reason I am here is an unusual one, but my job is to do the best job I can for the team while Fernando is out of the cockpit, and that’s what I’ll do.
“To be back in Melbourne is a fantastic feeling, especially as those memories of my podium here last year are incredibly special and something I’ll never forget. I loved racing on this circuit last year and I’m really looking forward to getting back out on track in Friday practice to continue the development of our car here. Although we had some challenges in Barcelona, overall the MP4-30 felt very positive and certainly different from last year’s car, in a good way.
“Of course, we aren’t expecting to win here, but my focus is on setting up the car for race conditions and pushing our progress forward. I’ll be working hard with my engineers to give them as much valuable feedback as possible so that they can keep developing the car and improving our performance and reliability.
“Although I didn’t expect to be sitting in the cockpit in Australia, I’ve spent the winter preparing as I would normally for a race season, so I feel fit and ready for the task ahead of me and to do the best I can for the team. It’s a fantastic opportunity for me to get more mileage under my belt in the MP4-30, and this will in turn benefit the team over the coming months as I work with the team back in Woking. The racing is sure to be unpredictable here at the start of the new season, and it’ll be really interesting to find out where we compare to the rest of the grid, but I’m definitely up for the challenge.”
#14 Fernando Alonso
Age | 33 (July 29 1981) |
GPs | 234 |
Wins | 32 |
Poles | 22 |
Fastest Laps | 21 |
Best result in Australia: | 1st (2006) |
“Of course, I’m very disappointed not to be joining Jenson in Melbourne in the McLaren-Honda garage, but I understand the recommendations of the doctors and I’m already back in training and preparing for my first race in the MP4-30. I would like to thank everybody for their kind wishes and support and I’ll be giving everything to be back in the cockpit for Malaysia. I wish Kevin all the best for this weekend in Australia, and I know the car is in his safe hands!
“Even though we faced a lot of challenges in the tests, I am very encouraged by the feeling I got from the car, and I’m looking forward to going through all of the data from this weekend with the team to continue our push for development and improve our performance.”
Eric Boullier – Racing director, McLaren-Honda
“The Australian Grand Prix marks the culmination of a huge amount of hard work and dedication from everyone within McLaren-Honda. It’s been a relatively short winter for us and there have proven to be testing times, but I am confident that we are moving forwards, and the race in Melbourne is just the beginning of a huge development in performance throughout the season.
“It is obviously disappointing that we weren’t able to do as many kilometres in testing as we had hoped, but we are undeterred and working relentlessly to improve the reliability of the MP4-30, and ultimately, make progress in terms of our raw pace. Despite our difficulties, our package shows a lot of promise; we completed a lot of valuable system checks and set-up work during testing, and the data from Jenson’s 101 laps on the second day of the final test in Barcelona is very encouraging.
“Of course, how this will translate to the Albert Park circuit, and especially relative to our competitors, is a difficult question, but there is complete focus, commitment and dedication from everyone in the team and we are very excited to debut the McLaren-Honda MP4-30 on track. I am confident in the progress we have made so far to get to this point, but we know there is a long road ahead in terms of our development and every kilometre will count.
“It’s a great feeling to be back in Melbourne; it’s a wonderful city and there is always a huge amount of excitement around at the start of the new season, for both the fans and the teams. Even more so this year, since this is the beginning of my second year at McLaren and the start of a new era with McLaren-Honda. We are ready for the challenge ahead of us, and cannot wait for the car to roll out of the garage this weekend for the first time at a Grand Prix; it will be a very poignant moment for the whole team.”
Yasuhisa Arai – Chief Officer of Motorsport, Honda R&D Co Ltd
“I am truly excited to see how our season and the new era will begin.
“The winter testing felt very short, and we did not have enough time to test how our newly developed power unit will fit the track. However, every day we gained essential feedback from the power unit, and it has been evolving ever since Jerez to Barcelona, and now to Melbourne.
“We look forward to testing ourselves on track, and seeing what we can achieve.”
Mika’s Australian Highs and Lows
As you read these words, the Formula 1 drivers and teams will be en route to Melbourne for the first Grand Prix of the new season. Many of them will have arrived already, in fact.
Nowadays the Australian Grand Prix is staged in Melbourne, but, during the course of my Formula 1 career, which began in 1991 and ended in 2001, the race was staged in two cities: Adelaide in 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994 and 1995, and Melbourne in 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000 and 2001.
I won the Australian Grand Prix only once, in 1998, and you could safely say it was a controversial victory.
As soon as my team-mate David Coulthard and I drove our McLaren-Mercedes MP4-13s out onto the Albert Park circuit that year, it was apparent that our cars were the class of the field. The MP4-13 was an utterly brilliant design, the work of Adrian Newey and his team of very clever men, and it was soon clear that David and I would achieve that much prized racing feat, the front-row lock-out. We duly did just that, I in P1 and DC in P2.
The margin of our superiority was staggering. That being the case, we knew that, barring disaster, we would be able to finish the race first and second too. However, what Ron Dennis was adamant that we should not do was race each other flat-out and potentially shunt each other off. “Be professional, guys,” Ron told us. “One of you is going to be world champion this year, and it’ll be a long season, so don’t cause us all a load of trouble by racing each other hell-for-leather here, which could risk DNFs for both of you.”
So we agreed a plan: whoever arrived at the first corner first would win the race.
It so happened that, as we powered away from the line, I it was who pushed the nose of my MP4-13 into the Turn One apex first, and I it was who was duly leading the race as we led the field into Turn Two.
David and I reeled the laps off – and, although we were not driving at ten-tenths or anything like it, still we pulled away from the rest of the field as easy as you like. As I say, our performance advantage was devastating. Were we driving flat-out? Absolutely not, no. I was taking things easy, in an effort not to over-work my car or my engine or my tyres, and David was doing exactly the same thing, keeping a few seconds behind me at all times so as to ensure that he was letting enough cooling air enter his car’s radiators. (Overheating is always a danger if you spend a prolonged period driving up another driver’s chuff, you see.)
Everything was going absolutely fine until, at the end of lap 36, just as I was approaching the pit-lane entrance, I heard the team say something to me on the radio. The message was not clear, so, as I was hurtling towards the pit-lane entrance, I had to make a decision: to box or not to box, that was the question.
I decided to box. But, as I drove down the pit-lane, I saw that my pit-crew had not assembled in readiness, and I realised that I had misheard the team’s radio message. Then Ron’s voice came over the radio: “Keep going, Mika. Keep going. Do not box. Repeat, do not box.”
So I drove all the way along the pit-lane, straight past my astonished pit-crew, who were still sitting on their chairs in our garage, and powered back out onto the circuit. But by that time, of course, DC had taken the lead.
I was in second place, and I was angry: not with my team, but with myself. And so I began to drive absolutely flat-out, leaving no margin anywhere, forcing that brilliant car to deliver fastest lap after fastest lap in my efforts to re-catch David.
By lap 50 I was on DC’s tail. Ron then asked DC to move over and let me past, on the basis that, as per our agreement, I had reached the first corner first, and, on that basis, it was ‘my’ race.
David did not have to obey. I guess he could have ignored Ron’s instruction – as Carlos Reutemann famously ignored an identical instruction in Brazil in 1981, communicated to him via a ‘JONES-REUT’ pit board held out repeatedly by Frank Williams, for whose Williams team Carlos and his team-mate Alan Jones were then driving, which Carlos coolly accelerated past without lifting his right foot, duly winning the race by 4.4 seconds.
After the race, I thanked David from the bottom of my heart. He had done a very honourable thing, which is not surprising, because he is a very honourable man. It cannot have been easy for him to do, but he did it because he is a gentleman.
In fact, though, although the way things panned out that afternoon must have pained him at the time, I think the long-term result of his chivalry was entirely positive for him. He had told the world – and Ron of course – that he was the ultimate team-player. He would go on to race in Formula 1 for McLaren-Mercedes until the end of the 2004 season, nine seasons in all (1996 to 2004), winning 12 Grands Prix for the famous Woking team. During David’s long and distinguished McLaren-Mercedes career, the team grew not only to respect him but to love him too.
I drove for the team until the end of the 2001 season, which means that DC and I were McLaren-Mercedes team-mates from 1996 to 2001 – six seasons in all. During that time, we became firm friends, and I regard David as a good mate still. If ever he and I bump in to each other in Monaco, where we both live, we always stop for a chat about the old days, and we often have a coffee as we do so.
DC is a class act and a lovely guy. He was also a really good driver – in fact I think he does not always get sufficient credit for his skill and speed. The 1998 season was a great one for both of us – I won the Drivers’ World Championship and he finished third in it – but he was often scarily quick. At Monaco, for example, which race I won, he may well have beaten me had he not suffered an engine failure on lap 18. He was pushing me incredibly hard at the time, both of us streaking away from the rest of the field at a rate of knots, and I am not at all certain that I would have been able to keep him at bay had his car stayed healthy until the end.
But you need that kind of luck in racing, and in 1998 it was my turn to have it.
Anyway, I digress. This blog is supposed to be about Australian Grands Prix – and, although I was delighted to win in Melbourne in 1998, despite the controversial circumstances, there is another Australian Grand Prix that looms even larger in my racing memory. Yes, that is correct, you have guessed right: I am referring to the 1995 Australian Grand Prix at Adelaide.
The 1995 Australian Grand Prix was the 17th and final race of that year’s Formula 1 campaign, and we (ie, my team-mate Mark Blundell and I) had not had a great year. Neither of us had managed to win a race – my best results had been twin second places in Italy and Japan – and as we arrived in Australia I have to admit we were pretty tired.
Even so, there was a fantastic spirit within the McLaren team, buoyed by the fact that we were in the first year of our new partnership with Mercedes, and we knew that, although success had not come yet, it would not be long in coming.
As I drove out onto the circuit for free practice on Friday morning, I remember thinking, “Let’s really go for it this weekend; let’s try to finish the season on a high.”
By Friday afternoon, I was really pushing, and, as I approached Brewery Bend, which was a fast-ish fourth-gear right-hander that you tackled at about 175km/h [109mph], and which you always wanted to take flat-out so as to maximise your speed onto the long Brabham Straight that followed, I felt something weird at the rear of the car. It was a puncture. In fact it was a blow-out – my left-rear tyre more or less exploded.
Brewery Bend was a very tricky corner. It had high kerbs on both entry and exit, and you had to be extremely precise there. Well, clearly, with a blown left-rear tyre, I was never going to be able to avoid those tricky high kerbs, was I?
I did not avoid them. I slammed the brakes on, but the car was running on three wheels, and it was bottoming as a result, which meant that even the three wheels it had left were not making proper contact with the tarmac, as a result of which the brakes were not managing to slow the car properly.
I remember thinking to myself, “This is gonna hurt.”
I missed the apex, hit the exit kerb with an almighty bang, and felt the car become airborne. I looked ahead and saw the tyre barrier approaching, and I knew there was absolutely no way I was going to be able to avoid it.
The car landed, bounced, and then smashed into the tyre barrier head-on.
We had no HANS devices in those days, and very little side-impact protection. All I could do was try my hardest to brace my body for the impact, and hope for the best.
It was a massive hit. Afterwards, I was still conscious, and I remember sitting still, staring straight ahead. Soon I realised I could not move. Even so, I was oddly calm. I remember thinking to myself that panicking would be a bad idea, so I simply sat and waited for the medical team to turn up.
They arrived very soon, and immediately began to work on me. Suddenly I felt a sharp pain in my throat – I later learned they had performed an emergency tracheotomy – and I then passed out.
Fortunately, the Adelaide circuit’s ambulance was always parked very near Brewery Bend, and the nearest hospital was just five minutes’ drive away. So I was rushed to hospital very efficiently indeed.
When I arrived there, the doctors determined that I had fractured my skull pretty severely, and that I had sustained quite a lot of damage to my inner ear. In the ambulance I had developed a massive headache, and soon after I had arrived at the hospital I started vomiting. The doctors did an MRI scan, shaved my hair off, operated, and sedated me.
Some hours later, when I came to, Ron and his family were at my bedside. They looked shocked, but it was hugely comforting for me to see their familiar faces. Didier Coton, my friend and manager then as now, was there too.
I stayed in hospital for many weeks. My recovery was painful and slow. Some of the muscles on one side of my face had been paralysed in the accident, and as a result I was unable to shut my eyes. At night-time the nurses used to tape my eyes shut, so that I could get some sleep.
My headache was more or less permanent, and intensely uncomfortable, and could be controlled only by potent medication. Day after day I remember watching the clock, willing its hands to move faster, so that it would be time for me to take my pain-killing meds again. I had lost a lot of weight – I looked unhealthily skinny, in fact. It was a dreadful time.
I longed to get better. I longed to walk again. I longed to do normal things. At that time I was not even thinking about racing.
Eventually, the doctors cleared me to fly home to Monaco. Didier accompanied me. That was a painful and stressful flight, but it was great finally to get home.
Gradually, I began to go for walks, and then, at last, for slow runs. But every time I would break into a jog, my head would begin hurting like crazy again. But I kept at the jogging, and eventually my headaches began to become less severe. One day I said to myself, “Yes, I want to race again. Racing is my life. It is what I do. It is what I am good at. It is what I must do. It is, in fact, what I will do to pull myself back to full health.”
And, that day, I felt the most amazingly powerful will to win rise up inside me. “Yes, I will not only race but also win. In fact, I will be world champion,” I said to myself.
I called Ron and told him how I felt. He was pleased but circumspect, as you would expect. He arranged for me to test our new car, the McLaren-Mercedes MP4/11, at Paul Ricard.
It was a truly beautiful day – bright winter sunshine – just perfect. The car looked fabulous. The mechanics were clearly pleased to see me, although I got some funny looks from them, because my smile was still lop-sided owing to the fact that the muscles on one side of my face were still not working perfectly.
I climbed into the cockpit, raised my right hand, gave a thumbs-up, and the mechanics started that big powerful Mercedes V10. I gave the throttle pedal a prod, let in the clutch, pulled out into the pit-lane and drove onto the track.
Immediately, I was in heaven. Straight away, I knew that I still had all my old talent. I began to push, and the lap-times were good. Soon I was driving absolutely flat-out.
I came into the pits, and smiled my lop-sided smile, and everyone looked very happy. It was one of the greatest days of my life.
The McLaren-Mercedes MP4/11 was not a great car, as things turned out, but it was reliable and predictable. I won no races in it, but I scored a lot of points. I ended up in fifth place in the 1996 Drivers’ World Championship, having scored four third places, two fourth places and four fifth places, one of them in the season’s first Grand Prix… in Australia. I was on my way again.
The following season, 1997, at Jerez, I won my first Grand Prix, and the season after that, 1998, I won my first World Championship… which is where we started this blog. But I could not have done any of it without the wonderful guys at McLaren-Mercedes, who supported me even when things looked utterly hopeless.
I thank, and salute, them all.